I went to Staples with a USB stick and the marquee saved to a large JPG file. I specified a size of 9x20. That's all I needed to do. $9 and 24hrs later (their printer was broken), I got the print back at the perfect size.

I went to Staples with a USB stick and the marquee saved to a large JPG file. I specified a size of 9x20. That's all I needed to do. $9 and 24hrs later (their printer was broken), I got the print back at the perfect size.

I went to Staples with a USB stick and the marquee saved to a large JPG file. I specified a size of 9x20. That's all I needed to do. $9 and 24hrs later (their printer was broken), I got the print back at the perfect size.

Glossy photo paper. The light rope in the shadowbox is strong enough to shine through nicely. However, I had to add a sheet of plastic (the one they use in fluorescent lighting) to scatter the light a bit. Without that, you could faintly see the individual LEDs of the light rope through the poster.

I went to Staples with a USB stick and the marquee saved to a large JPG file. I specified a size of 9x20. That's all I needed to do. $9 and 24hrs later (their printer was broken), I got the print back at the perfect size.

+1. I had mine done by Staples last month for around $9.00 on glossy paper and it turned out great.
I've been wrestling with trying to edit the ticket booth that was posted back a couple of years ago, but it's proved to be more difficult editing because it was a graphic image.

I'm doing a little tweaking on the concession stand marquee to fit my "classic retro" theme. It already has such an amazing resolution that I'm opting to burn it to DVD and display it as a pre-show with interchanging video and other images on a 50" plasma. With the right brightness, contrast and color settings, the natural back light from the flat screen can offer a much more impressive touch than a 9 x 20 or 16 x 20 shadow box. Or you might even do two different designs; one to print for a light box and the other to run on screen.